Has anyone been successful in replacing eggs with applesauce in a box brownies recipe? I'm trying to stick with a boxed brownie mix but has an egg and we have someone with an egg allergy in the house. When I tried it (1/4cup of applesauce per egg) the brownies came out oily, runny, and wouldn't bake. I am hoping to get a fudgy, chewy final product and not to dry out at all. Has anyone had any luck doing so?
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3Possible duplicate of Brownies without egg– mattmCommented Aug 31, 2017 at 17:46
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4You should make sure there's no egg in the brownie mixture in general. Many boxed mixes have powdered egg.– CatijaCommented Aug 31, 2017 at 18:00
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2I do not agree that this is a duplicate, since it's specifically asking about substituting applesauce and troubleshooting the results. The suggested duplicate has many potential substitutes, including applesauce.– EricaCommented Sep 1, 2017 at 15:32
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3Jennifer, it may depend on the brand of mix you used. Could you post the brand and the ingredients/method you used here?– CatijaCommented Sep 1, 2017 at 20:31
2 Answers
Egg yokes contain molecules called lecithins that act as an emulsifier (something that helps oils to mix with water). I'm guessing the brownie mix calls for canola oil to be added, which is what is causing it to come out oily. You can address this in a couple ways.
- Substitute the oil with butter. Butter is already an emulsion itself, and so will tend to separate less from the liquid ingredients. This will make the brownies thicker when cooled, so the mouthfeel will be less moist.
- Substitute 1 Tbsp soy lecithin (available from Amazon) per egg yolk. This is the most direct way to compensate.
Egg whites also have useful material properties for baking. They act as a leavening agent and also help provide a set texture when the protein denatures at high temperatures. These are harder to compensate for but also less critical than emulsification. Try these next ideas if you are still unsatisfied with the texture.
- Add baking powder if you want the brownies fluffier.
- I've never tried this personally, but apparently substituting 1/4 cup pureed silken tofu per egg will help your batter set as though it had egg whites. It makes sense since both are basically networks of hydrophilic proteins.
You can only substitute applesauce for oil. Can use powered egg, being sold on Amazon. But don't really need the egg at all. If you want...can use 1 Tlb per egg of Greek yogurt. Hav'nt tried it, but the chef on TV uses it.